SUMMARY RECORD 3 RD MEETING OF THE IOMC TECHNICAL COORDINATING GROUP ON PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS (POPs) 3 JUNE, 2005 WASHINGTON, DC

Similar documents
PROPOSED FRAMEWORK FOR A FINANCIAL MECHANISM FOR THE FUTURE MERCURY CONVENTION AND DRAFT OPERATIONAL PROGRAM FOR MERCURY

REFERENCE LIBRARY Document Cover Page. GEF ENABLING ACTIVITIES OUTLINE OF A PROPOSAL UNDER EXPEDITED PROCEDURES Sample With Indicative Entries

Agenda item 3: Annex UNEA 2 Resolution 2/7 on Sound Management of Chemicals and Waste Ongoing and Planned Implementing Action - UN Environment

Introduction to the Process of Reviewing and Updating National Implementation Plans

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)

FINAL REPORT. Lee Alexander Risby & Teresa Amador. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)

The Basel Convention At A Glance

Report on the meeting of the Bureau of the Committee for the Review of the Implementation of the Convention (Bonn, Germany, 4 April 2016)

Selection of Persistent Organic Pollutant Disposal Technology for the Global Environment Facility

International Conventions. Regional Training in Hazardous Waste September 30 October 2, 2014 San José, Costa Rica

Provisional annotated agenda and organization of work

Organisation de Coopération et de Développement Économiques Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Application from the World Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies for admission into official relations with WHO

Chemicals and wastes management

Pollutant Release and Transfer Register (Registro de Emisiones y Transferencia de Contaminantes)

CONCEPT PAPER. ASIA-EUROPE ENVIRONMENT FORUM 4 TH ROUNDTABLE Combine or Combust! Co-operating on Chemicals and Hazardous Substances Management

BUILDING PARTNERSHIPS. For Sound Management of. Chemicals

Global Engagement on Nano EHS: Role of the OECD in International Governance

PROCUREMENT AT CERN. STFC Mechanical Engineering - Meet the Buyer event

PROJECT IDENTIFICATION FORM (PIF) 1 PROJECT TYPE: Full-sized Project TYPE OF TRUST FUND:GEF Trust Fund

Workstream IV: Monitoring and Evaluation Background note: Overview of evaluation mechanisms in selected funds

Earth Negotiations Bulletin

THE GLOBAL BIOENERGY FIRST EDITION EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

WORKSHOP ON WASTE DISPOSAL

20 th. anniversary of the adoption of the. Basel Convention. Basel Convention celebrates its 20 th Anniversary. Achievements.

Economic and Social Council

Report of the Third Africa Regional Meeting on the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management

Travel support available to Parties to the WHO FCTC

Chemicals and wastes management

HISTORICAL. Center Ambitions

Designing the Key Features of a National PRTR System

Pesticide Evaluation Report and Safer Use Action Plan (PERSUAP)

ANNEX 3 FURTHER INFORMATION

Federal Environment Agency, Dessau, Germany 9-10 October 2014

Minutes of the. Third meeting of the UNFF 3 Bureau. UNFF Secretariat, DC-2 Building, New York. Wednesday, 26 February :00 am 3:00 pm

(UNEP/FAO/RC/COP.4/24)

Guidance for a Global Monitoring Programme for Persistent Organic Pollutants

The role of the health sector in the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management towards the 2020 goal and beyond

Report of the Sub-Committee of Experts on the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals on its thirty-third session

Report Ohrid 25/5/2017

Sixth Session of the Committee on Food Security and Sustainable Development (CFSSD-6)/Regional Implementation Meeting (RIM) for CSD-18

Climate change adaptation to protect human health

Africa Review Report on Chemicals (Executive Summary)

Arab Republic of Egypt

The role of the health sector in the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management towards the 2020 goal and beyond

Meeting at COP 20/CMP December 2014, 16:00-17:00

Charter of the Financial Stability Board 1

Overview of UN reform

Guidance on Action Plan Development for Sound Chemicals Management

Progress Report of the INTOSAI Working Group on Environmental Auditing

POLAND NATIONAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN FOR THE STOCKHOLM CONVENTION

QUESTIONNAIRE ON HOW PARLIAMENTS ORGANIZE THEIR WORK VIS-À-VIS THE UNITED NATIONS

UNEP and Climate Change - Question and Answer

The Cement. Sustainability Initiative. A Sectoral Approach. Greenhouse gas mitigation in the cement industry

TERMS OF REFERENCE Bangkok, Thailand with possible travel to countries in Asia Pacific.

Executive Committee of the Warsaw International Mechanism

THE NAIROBI CONVENTION FOR THE DEVELOPMENT, PROTECTION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE MARINE AND COASTAL ENVIRONMENT OF THE WESTERN INDIAN OCEAN

UNFCCC Secretariat Martin-Luther-King-Strasse 8 D Bonn Germany. February, I. Background

[ ] CEMR: A EUROPE WITH A LOCAL AND REGIONAL DIMENSION!

PROVISION OF SECRETARIAT SERVICES TO INTERIM REDD+ PARTNERSHIP

Nkayi and Ouesso: Site contaminated with pesticides and persistent organic pollutants in Congo

2. Resolved to establish a global network for the Resource Efficient and Cleaner Production (RECPnet); and

United Nations Volunteers (UNV) Submission for the Rio+20 Compilation Document

Open-ended Intergovernmental Expert Working Group on Indicators and Terminology relating to Disaster Risk Reduction

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 5 June /12 ENV 453 COMER 131 SAN 138 CHIMIE 47 ONU 70

Terms of Reference for the Strategy Group, Management Group and Secretariat

International Business Parcels Rate card

Intergovernmental Science-Policy. Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services

CDM DESIGNATED NATIONAL AUTHORITIES FORUM - DNA FORUM IN ETHIOPIA, AFRICA-

Training Workshop on the Updating of National Implementation Plans (NIPs) for Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) 4-6 April 2016 Suva, Fiji

BES. Intergovernmental Science-Policy. Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. Work on capacity-building (deliverables 1 (a) and 1 (b))

Development Partners Consultative Forum (DPCF)

Guidance from the twenty-third session of the Conference of the Parties: Co-Chairs proposal

Draft concept note for a household waste partnership

POLICY ON GENDER EQUALITY

PROMOTING AND SUPPORTING LOCAL MANUFACTURING OF QUALITY MEDICAL PRODUCTS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Final Report to the Ministers

CONVENTION ON MIGRATORY SPECIES

UNEP Global Mercury Partnership. Business Plan (October 2011) Mercury supply and storage partnership area

Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) Working Group. Progress Report to Senior Arctic Officials in Yellowknife, March 2014.

Ambient air sampling and analysis national and cross-cutting activities in the UNEP/GEF GMP2 project in Africa

ECE/AC.21/SC/2017/1 EUPCR /4.4/SC15/1. Economic and Social Council

Brazil Forest Investment Program Terms of Reference for the First Joint Mission 13 th 17 th February, 2012 Brasilia, Brazil

Report of the Working Party on the Strategic Framework and the Programme Budget on its sixty-fourth session

Economic and Social Council

IGOS PROCESS PAPER (Last update: 19 March 2003) THE INTEGRATED GLOBAL OBSERVING STRATEGY (IGOS) PARTNERSHIP PROCESS CONTENTS

CEM8 CHAIR S SUMMARY: Shared Global Leadership in Clean Energy

OSAKA. NAGOYA ORGANIZER:Japan Die & Mold Industry Association Japan Metal Stamping Association Television Osaka(for Osaka only)

United Nations Environment Programme United Nations Institute for Training and Research

November Food and. Agricultura. Organization of the United Nations COUNCIL. Hundred and Forty-fifth Session. Rome, 3-7 December 2012

Report to the G20 Los Cabos Summit on Strengthening FSB Capacity, Resources and Governance June 2012

PCR Preparation to Submission. Mary-Ellen Foley 9 th Annual Financial Agents Workshop Washington DC March 31-April 1, 2005

NOTIFICATION TO THE PARTIES

Sino-Italian Demonstration Project for BAT/BEP Implementation & UP-POPs Reduction in China. Prof. Gang YU,

REPORT 4 TH FAO/WHO JOINT MEETING ON PESTICIDE MANAGEMENT. and 6 TH SESSION OF THE FAO PANEL OF EXPERTS ON PESTICIDE MANAGEMENT

United Nations Environment Programme

Opening address by Mr. Rapibhat Chandarasrivongs

MAP COMPONENTS and BARCELONA CONVENTION

(Independent Final Evaluation of the Project GF/VIE/08/005)

Transcription:

SUMMARY RECORD 3 RD MEETING OF THE IOMC TECHNICAL COORDINATING GROUP ON PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS (POPs) 3 JUNE, 2005 WASHINGTON, DC 1. The third meeting of the IOMC Coordinating Group on POPs was held in Washington, DC, at the World Bank Headquarters on 3 June 2005. The meeting was chaired by UNITAR (Craig Boljkovac). The following organizations were represented: FAO, UNDP, UNEP, UNIDO, UNITAR, WHO and the World Bank. 2. Meeting discussions concentrated on the following subject areas: - Briefing on SC COP-1 and follow-up; - Relationship to the IOMC Coordinating Group on Obsolete Stocks (which held an informal meeting at COP-1 - Reporting by POs on POPs-related project work (including, but not limited to, GEF projects) - Future plans of POs related to POPs, and opportunities for coordination/cooperation, and - Discussion of challenges related to GEF projects. Briefing on COP-1 of the Stockholm Convention, and related follow-up: 3. John Whitelaw (UNEP) briefed the group on major outcomes from COP-1, which had been held the previous month in Punta del Este, Uruguay. These included decisions on: technical assistance; guidance to the financial mechanism; criteria for the regional and sub-regional delivery of assistance; implementation plans; continuation of the BAT-BEP process; and secretariat location (Geneva); commissioning of a study to estimate the costs of convention implementation; and sharing an Executive Secretary that would serve both the Rotterdam Convention (UNEP aspects), and the Stockholm Convention. John Whitelaw also provided an overview of anticipated intersessional work, including a BAT-BEP meeting in November 2005, a first meeting of the POPs Review Committee, also scheduled for November 2005. 1/6

Recent IOCC consideration of the Future of Coordinating Groups 4. Craig Boljkovac distributed a letter (IOMC_CG_POPs/3.04) from Niek van der Graff, Chair, IOCC, indicating that, after consideration of the IOCC of the future of the IOMC Coordinating Groups, including the distribution of a questionnaire to each group and analysis of its results, it was decided that the POPs CG can continue to exist as an IOMC CG. Craig thanked the POs for their inputs into the response of this group to the questionnaire. Relationship to the IOMC Coordinating Group on Obsolete Stocks 5. Craig Boljkovac distributed the minutes of an ad-hoc meeting of the IOMC Coordinating Group on Obsolete Stocks (IOMC_CG_POPs/3.05), which took place during COP-1 in Uruguay. He had attended the meeting. Prior to the meeting of that group, and as a result of the IOCC internal review of Coordinating Groups, the question of whether to merge the Obsolete Stocks CG with the POPs CG had been raised. The Obsolete Stocks CG considered that the TOR of their group were sufficiently different from those of this group (for example, their group is not limited to POPs) (IOMC_CG_POPs/3.06) that they proposed to continue to exist independently. After a short discussion, this group concurred with that decision. Reporting by POs on POPs project and related work 6. All POs reported on various project work they were undertaking including, but not limited to, GEF projects. Highlights of projects by POs included: FAO: Africa Stockpiles Programme (to commence in the near future; cofinancing is confirmed); cooperation with UNEP on a GEF project (in late approval stages) for pesticides use reduction in west Africa/Niger River; and another GEF project on termite control. WHO: Working with Sweden to strengthen health sector participation in National Implementation Plans for the Convention; and research on breast milk monitoring; DDT projects (in cooperation with UNEP). UNIDO: NIPs assistance is continuing; for UNIDO projects cofinancing is a challenge; involved in BAT-BEP, possible projects to test guidance; non-combustion project continuing; PCB elimination projects; the IPEN project; and a regional (Africa) project to develop appropriate strategies for identifying sites contaminated by chemicals listed in Annexes A, B and/or C of the Stockholm Convention. UNEP: DDT projects (in cooperation with WHO); 12-country NIP project continues; support for UNIDO IPEN project; cooperation with UNITAR on NIPs; a second global consultation meeting on PCBs (with an industry focus) the week of 14 November 2005 in Mexico City (open to all); BAT-BEP experts meeting (in cooperation with the Convention secretariat, last week of November 2005 in Geneva (open to observers); POPs Review Committee week of 14 th November 2005 in Geneva (also open to observers). 2/6

UNDP: medical waste project; implementing agency for a GEF project on PCB elimination in Ghana (UNITAR is co-executing with Ghana); working with UNIDO on the non-combustion project in the Slovak Republic and the Philippines; 2 GEF projects on action plan development with UNITAR; PCBs work in Argentina; and a GEF project in Macedonia. World Bank: Working with Brazil to support the development of a mechanism (with some similarities to the US Superfund programme) to remediate contaminated sites; projects on byproducts are under development; China PCBs and termites projects, and the Africa Stockpiles Programme. UNITAR: Numerous Action Plan skills-building projects in some 50 countries (Swiss, GEF and UNDP); Ghana PCB project; NIP assistance in 5 countries, including precedent-setting cooperation with UNIDO in China; cooperation with UNEP on National Profile development; investigation of possible PRTR and GHS-related POPs projects (due to country requests); support for IPEN GEF project; and National Profile support for India (with Canadian funding request to link to POPs). 7. Discussion: The CG participants also discussed future plans of POs related to POPs, opportunities for coordination/cooperation, and challenges related to current and future work. Highlights of the discussion included: A request for UNEP to re-circulate its NIP contact list; A request for UNITAR to consider to build in health-sector-related awareness-raising into its action plan training, in the context of further developing stakeholder-related guidance; A proposal for a joint meeting with GEFSEC to discuss challenges related to GEF projects, including, inter alia: business arrangements, fee structures; the system to comment on projects; and cost recovery for project development; That the group consider developing a joint IOMC brochure that outlines how we cooperate on POPs-related issues (chair will investigate status of current IOMC brochure) and possible joint side-event and/or booth at COP-2; That IGOs can put information items into COP discussions such as guidance being developed etc. Other business/institutional arrangements/next meeting 8. The POs came to a clear understanding that if an organization refers to agreement in this CG that in other work (e.g. project proposals), they will notify in writing the other POs in advance of submission. This understanding came as the result of an incident where CG agreement was used as a rationale for support for a project without the knowledge of the CG. 9. Craig Boljkovac of UNITAR was confirmed as Chair of the CG; UNEP will provide secretariat. CG POs will investigate possible financial support from IOMC for this arrangement. 3/6

10. It is proposed that this CG attempt to meet every 6 months, in line with GEF Council meetings where possible. It was also proposed that this CG meet jointly with the GEF POPs Task Force at least once per year. The CG chair will propose this to the chair of the Task Force. 11. The next meeting is tentatively scheduled for 11 November 2005, in Washington D.C. The CG will request that this be a joint meeting with the GEF POPs Task Force. z:\cwm.11\iomc cg\3rd meeting cg washington 3 june 2005\iomc cg summary june 2005_final.doc 4/6

Annex 1 3 rd Meeting of the IOMC Coordinating Group on POPs World Bank Headquarters, Washington D.C. 8:30-1 pm, Friday, 3 June 2005 Room MC5-500 (Coffee and pastries at 8:15; coffee break at 11:00) 1) Approval of draft Agenda (all) (document: IOMC_CG_POPs/3.01, and IOMC-CG- POPs/3.02) 2) Review of minutes of last IOMC CG meeting (all) (document: IOMC_CG_POPs/3.03) 3) Briefing on SC COP-1 (SSC representative), and Discussion on Follow-up (all) 4) Recent IOCC consideration of the Future of Coordinating Groups (Chair) (document: IOMC_CG_POPs/3.04) 5) Relationship to the IOMC Coordinating Group on Obsolete Stocks (which held an informal meeting at COP-1) (Chair) (documents IOMC_CG_POPs/3.05 - Obsolete Stocks CG Minutes; and IOMC_CG_POPs/3.06 POPs CG TOR) 6) Reporting by POs on POPs-related project work (including, but not limited to, GEF projects) (all) 7) Future plans of POs related to POPs, and opportunities for coordination/cooperation (all) 8) Other business//institutional arrangements/next meeting 5/6

Annex 2 List of Participants 3 rd Meeting of the IOMC Coordinating Group on POPs World Bank Headquarters, Washington D.C. Friday, 3 June 2005 Room MC5-500 Name Institution Address E mail Telephone Fax Suely suely.carvalho@undp.org tel. (212) 906- Carvalho 6687 Craig Boljkovac John Whitelaw Niek van der Graaf Mohamed Eisa Catalina Marulanda Tim Meredith Chief, Montreal Protocol Unit and Principal Technical Advisor- Chemicals Programme Coordinator. POPs Programme Deputy UNEP-Chemicals Chief, Plant Production and Protection Division (AGPP) FAO Industrial Development Officer; Chief, POPs Unit, UNIDO Montreal Protocol/POPs Unit, World Bank Coordinator, WHO/IPCS FF-970 One United Nations Plaza New York, NY 10017 USA UNITAR Palais des Nations CH-1211 GENEVE 10 Switzerland International Environment House 11-13 chemin des Anémones CH- 1219 Châtelaine Switzerland Via delle Terme de Caracalla 00100 Rome Italy PO Box 300 A-1400 Wien Austria 1818 H Street N.W. Washington DC 20433 USA 20 Avenue Appia Ch-1211 Geneva Switzerland craig.boljkovac@unitar.org TEL +41 22 917 84 71 jwhitelaw@unep.ch +41 22 917 8360 (212) 906 6947 FAX +41 22 917 80 47 +41 22 797 34 60 niek.vandergraaff@fao.org +39 6 5705 3441 +39 6 5705 3152 m.eisa@unido.org +43 1 260 264261 +43 1 26026 6819 cmarulanda@worldbank.org +1 202 473 8616 +1 202 522 3258 mereditht@who.int +41 22 791 43 48 +41 22 791 48 48 6/6